LIBRARY  OF  CONGRESS 

DIVISION  OF  BIBLIOGRAPHY 


SELECT 


LIST  OF  KEFEKENCES 


ON 


THE  NEGRO  QUESTION 


COMPILED   UNDER   THE   DIRECTION   OF 

A.   P.   O.   GKRJFFIN 

CHIEF     OF     DIVISION     OF     BIBLIOGRAPHY 


V)H 

.CA 

WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT   PRINTING    OFFICE 

1903 


•- 

LIBBAKY  OF  CONGRESS 

DIVISION  OF  BIBLIOGRAPHY 


SELECT 


LIST  OF  REFERENCES 


ON 


THE  NEGRO  QUESTION 


COMPILED    UNDER    THE    DIRECTION    OF 

A.   P.   C.    GKRIFFIl^ 

CHIEF     OF     DIVISION     OF     BIBLIOGRAPHY 


WASHINGTON 

GOVERNMENT   PRINTING    OFFICE 

1903 


INTRODUCTION. 


This  is  one  of  a  number  of  lists  upon  topics  of  current  interest 
which  have  been  compiled  to  meet  requests  by  letter.  So  far  as  it 
could  be  distributed  at  all  it  has  hitherto  been  distributed  in  type 
written  form.  The  applications  have  become  so  numerous  that  it  has 
now  been  reduced  to  print,  so  as  to  be  available  for  more  general 
distribution. 

It  has  no  claim  to  completeness;  nor  does  it  even  attempt  to  exhaust 
the  resources  of  this  Library  on  the  subject.  Its  purpose  is  merely  to 
present  some  of  the  authorities  of  interest  to  the  general  inquirer. 
The  special  investigator  must,  of  course,  go  much  further. 

A.  P.  C.  GRIFFIN, 
Chief  of  Division  of  Bibliography. 
HERBERT  PUTNAM, 

Librarian  of  Congress. 
WASHINGTON,  D.  C.,  March  26,  1903. 

3 


165200 


LIST  OF  BOOKS  ON  THE  NEGRO  QUESTION. 


Abbott,  Ernest  Hamlin.  Religious  life  in  America.  A  record  of 
personal  observation. 

New  York:    Th,<  Outlook  company,  1903.     ,/•//,  370pp.     8°. 
"Religious  tendencies  of  the  negro,"  pp.  81-104. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.  America's 
race  problems.  Addresses  at  the  fifth  annual  meeting, 
April  li>-18, 


[Philadelphia:    American    academy   of  political   <nxl  social 
science,  190  l.\     187  pp.     8°. 

Content*:  The  races  of  the  Pacific:  The  natives  of  Hawaii;  a  study 
of  Polynesian  charm,  by  Titus  Munson  Coan;  The  races  of  the 
Philippines  —  The  Tagals,  by  Charles  C.  Pierce;  The  semi-civilized 
tribes  of  the  Philippine  Islands,  by  Oliver  C.  Miller;  The  causes 
of  race  superiority,  by  Edward  A.  Ross;  The  race  problem  at  the 

I  South:  Introductory  remarks,  by  Hilary  A.  Herbert;  The  relation 
of  the  whites  to  the  negroes,  by  George  T.  Winston;  The  relation 
of  the  negroes  to  the  whites  in  the  South,  by  W.  E.  Burghardt 
Du  Bois;  The  races  of  the  West  Indies:  Our  relation  to  the  people 
of  Cuba  and  Porto  Rico,  by  Orville  II.  Platt;  The  Spanish  popu 
lation  of  Cuba  and  Porto  Rico,  by  Charles  M.  Pepper. 

American  negro  academy.     Occasional  papers.     Nos.  1.  2,  4,  0. 

Washington  ,  D.  C.     PuUixhed  It/  tlie  Academy,  1897-1899. 
,£  voh.     8°. 

Baldwin.  William  H.  jr.     The  present  problem  of  negro  education. 

(In  American  social  science  association.  Journal,  number  37, 
December,  1899,  pp.  52-68.  ) 

Barringer,  Paul  Brandon.     The  American  negro:  his  past  and  future. 
3d  edition. 

Raleiyh,  N.  €.:  Edward*  A  Broughton,  1900.    23  pp.     8°. 

-  ''The  sacrifice  of  a  race."     An  address  delivered  before  the 
race  conference  at  Montgomery,  Ala.,  May  10,  1900. 

Raleigh,  N.  C.,  1900.     30  pp.     8°. 


6  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

Blair,  Lewis  H      The  prosperity  of  the  South  dependent  on  the  eleva 
tion  of  the  negro. 
Richmond,   Va.:   K   Waddy,  1889.     ix,  147pp.     12°. 

9  Blyden,  Edward  W.     Christianity,  Islam  and  the  negro  race.      With 

an  introduction  by  the  Hon.  Samuel  Lewis.    2d  edition. 
London:   ^Y.  B.   Whittinghani  A  co.,  1888.     (4).  a-v.  (1),  432 
pp.  8°. 

"African  colonisation,"  pp.  383-423. 

"Appendix.    The  Republic  of  Liberia,"  pp.  425-432. 

Brackett,  Jeffrey  K.     The  negro  in  Maryland.     A  study  of  the  insti 
tution  of  slaveiy. 

Baltimore:  N.  Murray,  1889.  (6),  268  pp.  8°.  (Johns 
Hopkins  University  studies  in  historical  and  political  science. 
Extra  vol.  6.) 

Notes  on  the  progress  of  the  colored  people  of  Maryland 
since  the  war.  A  supplement  to  The  negro  in  Maryland: 
a  study  of  the  institution  of  slavery. 

Baltimore:  Publication  agency  of  the  Johns  Hopkins  Univer 
sity,  July,  August,  September,  1890.  96  pp.  8°.  (Johns 
Hopkins  University  studies  in  historical  and  political  science. 
Eighth  series,  7-8-9.} 

Brannon,  Henry.     A  treatise  on  the  rights  and  privileges  guaranteed 
by  the  fourteenth  amendment  to  the  Constitution  of  the 
United  States. 
Cincinnati:  W.  JI.  Anderson  cfe<:v>.,  1901.     ?V,  (!},  562 pp.    8°. 

Brown,  William  Garrott.     The  lower  South  in  American  historv. 

New  York:   The  Macinillan  company,  1902.     ,W,  (/),  271  pp. 

12C. 

"The  Ku  Klux  movement,"  pp.  189-225. 
"Shifting  the  white  man's  burden,"  pp.  245-271 

Bruce,  Philip  A.     The  plantation  negro  as  a  freeman.     Observations 

on  his  character,  condition,  and  prospects  in  Virginia. 
New  York  and  London:    G.  P.  Putnam' ',$•  sons,  1889.     v,r,  (/), 
262pp.     12°.     (Questions  of  the  day,  no.  57.} 

Cable,  George  Washington.     The  negro  question. 

New  York:  Charles  Scribner's  sons,  1890.  w',  (2},  173  pp. 
12°. 

The  silent  South,  together  with  the  f reedmairs  case  in  equity, 
and  the  convict  lease  system.  New  edition. 

New  York:  Charles  Scrihner's  sons,  1889.  vi,  (2),  213  pp. 
Portrait.  12Z. 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGKO    QUESTION.  7 

Calhoun,  William  Patrick.     The  Caucasian  and  negro  in  the  United 
States.     They  must  be  separate.     If  not,  then  extermina 
tion.     A  proposed  solution:  colonization. 
Columbia,  S.  C. :   The  E.  L.  Bryan  eo.,1902.     171pp.     Por 
trait.     12°. 

Chandler,  Julian  A.  C.     Representation  in  Virginia. 

Baltimore:  The  Johns  Hopkins  press,  1896.  83  pp.  8°. 
(Johns  Hopkins  University  studies  in  historical  and  politi 
cal  science.  Fourteenth  series,  6-7.) 

[Christinas,  L.  T.]     An  evil  router  from  all  the  walks  of  life — from 
the  cradle  to  the  grave.     A  panacea  for  racial  friction  and  a 
crowning  benediction  to  humanity. 
Raleigh,  N.  C.,  Edwards  &  Broughton.  1900.     36  pp.     8°. 

Clayton,  Virginia  V.     White  and  black  under  the  old  regime.     With 

introduction  by  F.  C.  Morehouse. 

Milwaukee:  The  Young  churchman  co.,  [1899].  195  pp. 
Plate*.  Portraits.  16^. 

Clowes,  Wr.  Laird.  Black  America:  a  stud}r  of  the  ex-slave  and  his 
late  master.  Reprinted,  with  large  additions,  from  "The 
Times." 

Cassell  &  company,  London  [etc.],  1891.  wiii,  (1),  240  pp. 
Map.  12°. 

Cook,  Charles  C.     A  comparative  study  of  the  negro  problem. 

Washington  D.  C. :  Published  hy  the  Academy,  1899.  llpp. 
8°.  {American  negro  academy .  Occasional  papers,  no.  4-) 

Cross,  Samuel  Creed.     The  negro  and  the  sunny  South.     A  lecture. 
,S.  C.  Cross,  publisher,  Martinsburg,  West  Ya. ,  1899.     136pp. 
Portrait.     12°. 

9  Gulp,  Daniel  Wallace,  ed.  Twentieth  century  negro  literature;  or, 
A  cyclopedia  of  thought  on  the  vital  topics  relating  to  the 
American  negro,  by  one  hundred  of  America's  greatest 
negroes. 

Naperville,  III. :  J.  L.  Nichols  A  co.,  [1902].  472pp.  Fron 
tispiece.  Portraits.  8°. 

Curry,  J.  L.  M.  1.  Difficulties,  complications  and  limitations  con 
nected  with  the  education  of  the  negro.  2.  Education  of 
the  negroes  since  I860. 

(  Tn  United  States.    Commissioner  of  education.     Report,  1894-95, 
vol.  2,  pp.  1366-1384.     Washington,  1896.) 


8  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

Du  Bois,  W.  E.  Burghardt.  The  college-bred  negro;  report  of  a 
social  study  made  under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  univer 
sity;  together  with  the  proceedings  of  the  fifth  conference 
for  the  study  of  the  negro  problems,  held  at  Atlanta  uni 
versity,  May  29-30,  1900. 

Atlanta,  Ga.:  Atlanta  university  press,  1900.  (2},llf>,(l}pp. 
8°.  (Atlanta  university.  Publications,  no.  J.) 

-  The  conservation  of  races. 

Washington:  Published  by  the  Academy,  1897.  15  pp.  8°. 
(The  American  negro  acaden<y.  Occasional  papers,  no.  2.} 

The  negro  common  school.  Report  of  a  social  study  made 
under  the  direction  of  AtLnta  university;  together  with  the 
proceedings  of  the  sixth  conference  for  the  stud}r  of  the 
negro  problems,  held  at  Atlanta  university,  on  May  28, 
1901. 

University  press,  Atlanta,  Georgia,  1901.  (4),  ii,  (£),  120pp. 
8C.  (Atlanta  university.  Publications,  no.  6.) 

The  negro  in  business.  Report  of  a  social  studjr  made  under 
the  direction  of  Atlanta  university;  together  with  the  pro 
ceedings  of  the  fourth  conference  for  the  study  of  the  negro 
problems,  held  at  Atlanta  university,  May  30-31,  1899. 

Atlanta,  Georgia,  1899.  (4),  77  pp.  8°.  (Atlanta  univer 
sity .  Publications,  no.  4-) 

-  The  negro  in  the  black  belt:  some  social  sketches. 

(In  United  States.     Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin  vol.  4,  no.  22, 
pp.  401-416.     Washington,  1899.     8°.) 

The  negro  landholder  of  Georgia. 

(In  United  States.    Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin  no.  35,  pp.  H47- 
777.     Washington,  1901.     8°.) 

-  The  negroes  of  Farmville,  Virginia:  a  social  study. 

(In  United  States.     Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin,  vol.  3,  no.  14, 
pp.  1-38.     Washington,  1898.     8°. ) 

-  The  Philadelphia  negro,   together  with  a  special   report   on 

domestic  service,  by  Isabel  Eaton. 

^Boston:  Ginn  cfe  GO.  ,  1899.  #°.  ( University  of  Pennsylvania. 
Publications.  Series  in  political  economy  and  public  law, 
no.  14.) 

A  select   bibliography   of  the   American    negro  for  general 

readers. 

Atlanta,  Georgia,  1901.  11  pp.  6'°.  (Atlanta  University. 
Publications.} 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGRO    QUESTION.  9 

Du  Bois,  W.  E.  Burghardt.  Some  efforts  of  American  negroes  for 
their  own  social  betterment.  Report  of  an  investigation 
under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  University;  together  with 
the  proceedings  of  the  third  conference  for  the  stud}7  of 
the  negro  problems,  held  at  Atlanta  University,  May 
25-26,  1898. 

Atlanta,  Ga. :  Atlanta  university  press,  1898.     (2],  66  pp.    8°. 
(Atlanta  university.     Publications,  no.  3.} 

Ferrer  de  Couto.  Jose.     Los  negros  en  su  diversos  estados  y  condi- 
ciones;  tales  como  son,  como  se  supone  que  son,  y  como 
deben  ser. 
Nueva  York:  Imprenta  de  Hallet,  1864.     310,  (1}  pp.     8°. 

Fortune,  T.  Thomas.     Black  and  white:  land,  labor,  and  politics  in  the 

South. 

New  York:  Fords,  Howard,  A  Ifnlbert,  1884.     310pp.     16°. 
(American  questions. ) 

§     G-aines,  D.  B.     Racial  possibilities  as  indicated  by  the  negroes  of 

Arkansas. 

Little  Rock,  Ark. :  Print,  dept.  of  Philander  Smith  college, 
1898.     189pp.     Illustrations.     12°. 

Gannett,  Henry.     Occupations  of  the  negroes. 

Baltimore:  Published  by  the  Trustees,  1895.     15pp.     Plates. 
8°.     (John  F.  Slater  fund.      Occasional  papers,  no.  6.) 

Reprinted  in  United  States.     Commissioner  of  Education.     Report, 
1894-95,  vol.  2,  pp.  1385-1396.     Washington,  1896. 

Gibson,  J.  W.,  W.  H.  Crogman,  and  others.  The  colored  American 
from  slavery  to  honorable  citizenship. 

J.  L.  Nichols  cfe  co.,  Atlanta,  Ga.  [etc.]  1902.     7 3% pp.      Illus 
trations.      Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

•  G-uthrie,  James  M.  Camp-tires  of  the  Afro- American,  or,  the  col 
ored  man  as  a  patriot,  soldier,  sailor,  and  hero,  in  the  cause 
of  free  America. 

Philadelphia:  Af ro-  American  pub.  co.,  1899.    710pp.    Illus 
trations.     Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

Guthrie,  AVilliam  D.  Lectures  on  the  fourteenth  article  of  amend 
ment  to  the  Constitution  of  the  United  States. 

Boston:  Little,  Brown  and  company,  1898.     xxviii,  265  pp. 

oo 
o    . 

•  Hampton  normal  and  agricultural  institute.  Twenty-two  years'  work 
of  the  Hampton  normal  and  agricultural  institute  at  Hamp 
ton,  Virginia.  Records  of  negro  and  Indian  graduates  and 
ex-students.  With  historical  and  personal  sketches  and  tes- 


10  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

timony  on  important  race  questions  from  within  and  with 
out.     Illustrated  with  views  and  maps. 

Hampton:  Normal  school  press,  1893.  y,  (J),  520.  (8}  pp. 
Frontis})iece  (Folded plate} .  Folded  maps.  8°. 

Haynes,  G.  H.     Representation  in  state  legislatures.     The  Southern 
states. 

(In  American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals,  vol. 
16,  pp.  93-119.     Philadelphia,  1900.) 

Herbert,  Hilary  A.,  and  others.     Why  the  solid   South?   or.   recon 
struction  and  its  results. 
Baltimore:  R.  II.  Woodward  cfc  co.,  1890.     vvn,  452  pp.  16°. 

9    Hoar,  George  Frisbie.     The  opportunity  of  the  colored  leader.     An 

address  to  the  law  class  of  Howard  university,  189-i. 
Washington:  Howard  university  press,  1894.     17  pp.     8'-'. 

Hoffman,  Frederick  L.     Race  traits  and  tendencies  of  the  American 
negro. 

Published  for  the  American  economic  association  hy  the  Mac- 
millan  company,  Nev*  York,  [1896].  329  pp.  8'.  (Amer 
ican  economic  association.  Publications,  vol.  11,  nos.  1,2 
and  3.} 

Ingle,  Edward.     The  negro  in  the  District  of  Columbia. 

(In  Johns  Hopkins  University  studies  in  historical  and  political 
science.     Eleventh  series,  3-4,  March-April,  1893,  pp.  93-202.  8°. ) 

Southern  sidelights.     A  picture  of  social  and  economic  life  in 

the  South  a  generation  before  the  war. 
New  York:   Thomas  Y.  Orowell  <&  company,  [1896].     (6').  373 

pp.     12°.     (Library  of  economics  and  politics,  no.  10.) 

(T  Johnson,   Edward  A.      History   of    negro    soldiers    in  the   Spanish- 
American  war,  and  other  items  of  interest. 

Raleigh,  N.  C.:  Capital  printing  co..  1899.  147pp.  Platen. 
Portrait.  6>c. 

Kettell,  Thomas  Prentice.     Southern  wealth  and  Northern  profits,  as 

exhibited  in  statistical  facts  and  official  figures:   showing 

the  necessity  of  union  to  the  future  prosperity  and  welfare 

of  the  Republic. 

New  York.:    George  W.  c6  John  A.  Wood,  1860.     173pp.     8°. 

Laws,  J.   Bradford.     The   negroes  of    Cinclare  central   factory  and 
Calumet  plantation,  Louisiana. 

( In  United  States.    Department  of  Labor.    Bulletin  no.  38,  pp.  95-120. 
Washington,  1902.     8°.) 

Le  Conte,  Joseph.     The  race  problem  in  the  South. 

(In  Brooklyn  ethical  association.     Man  and  the  state.     Studies  in 
applied  sociology,  pp.  349-402.     New  York,  1892.     8°. ) 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGRO    QUESTION.  11 

Love,  John  L.     The  disfranchisement  of  the  negro. 

Washington,  I).  C,:  Published  by  the  Academy,  1899.  (0), 
27  pp.  8Z.  (The  American  negro  academy.  Occasional 
papers,  no.  6.) 

Mayo,  A.  I).  The  opportunity  and  obligation  of  the  educated  class 
of  the  colored  race  in  the  southern  states. 

( In  United  States.     Commissioner  of  Education.     Report,  1898-99, 
vol.  1,  pp.  1227-1246.     Washington,  1900.     8".) 

-  Third  estate  at  the  South.     An  address  delivered  before  the 

American  social  science  association  at   Saratoga,   N.    Y., 
Sept.  2,  1890. 
Boston:    G.  If.  Ellis,  1890.     24pp.     8°. 

Miller,  Kelly.     "The  primary  needs  of  the  negro  race;'1  an  address 
*  delivered  before  the  alumni  association  of  the  Hampton 

normal  and  agricultural  institute,  June  14,  1899. 
Washington,  D.  C.:  Howard  university  press,  1899.     IS  pp. 
8°. 

-  A   review   of    Hoffman's   race   traits   and   tendencies   of   the 

American  negro. 

Washington,  D.  C.:  Published  by  the  Academy,  1897.  36 
pp.  8°.  (American  negro  academy.  Occasional  papers, 

110.    1.} 

Morgan,  John  T.  Negro  suffrage  in  the  South.  Mr.  Pritchard's  res 
olution.  Speech  in  the  Senate  of  the  United  States,  Jan 
uary  8,  1900. 

Washington.,  1900.      16  pp.    8~. 
Cover-title. 

t       Morgan,  T.  J.     The  negro  in  America,  and  the  ideal  American  repub 
lic. 

Philadelphia:  American  Baptist  publishing  society.  [1898], 
203pp.  12C. 

I       Nash,  Charles  E.     The  status  of  the  negro,  from  a  negro's  standpoint, 

in  his  own  dialect. 

Little  Rock,  Ark..:    Turn, ah  cfc  Pittard,  1900.     32pp.     Illus 
trations.     12°. 
t        National  negro  business  league.     Proceedings  of  the  first  meeting, 

held  in  Boston,  Massachusetts,  August  23  and  24,  1900. 
[«/.  E.  Hamm,  publisher,   Boston,  1901.]     279  pp.     Plates. 
Portrait.     S~. 

Nieboer,  H.   J.      Slavery   as   an    industrial    system.       Ethnological 

researches. 
The  Hague:  Martinus  Nijhof,  1900.     xxvii,  (1),  4?4pp-    S°. 


12  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

Northrop,  Henry  Davenport,  Joseph  li.  Gay  Northrop,  and  I.  Gar 
land  Penn.  The  southern  college  of  life  and  universal  edu 
cator;  being  a  manual  of  self -improvement  and  guide  to 
success  for  the  colored  race. 

Philadelphia,  Pa.:  National  publishing  c<>.,  [1908].  (6'), 
17-164,  ''vV,  [lit] — ,/•/'///,  700,  (8},  vii  pp.  /Hunt rations. 
Plates.  Portrait*.  Map.  8~. 

Pell,  Edward  Leigh.  The  bright  side  of  humanity;  glimpses  of  life 
in  every  land,  showing  the  distinctive  noble  traits  of  all 
races. 

Richmond,   Va.:   The  B.  11\  Johnson  publishing  co.,[1900]. 
602  pp.    Illustration*.    PI  ate*  (partly  colored}.   Portraits.  8°. 
The  American  negro,  pp.  303-343. 

Penn,  I.  Garland,  and  J.  W.  E.  Bo-wen.  The  united  negro:  his  prob 
lems  and  his  progress.  Containing  the  addresses  and  pro 
ceedings  the  Negro  young  people's  Christian  and  educa 
tional  congress,  held  August  0-11,  1902. 

Atlanta,  Ga.:  D.  E.  Luther  publishing  co.,  1902.  xxx,  600 
pp.  Plates.  Po, 'traits.  12°. 

Pierce,    Edward   L.     Enfranchisement   and   citizenship.     Addresses 

and  papers.     Edited  by  A.  W.  Stevens. 
Boxton:  Roberts  brothers,  1896.     vii,  (2),  397 pp.     8'-. 

Chapters,  pp.  142-184,  contains  "Two  systems  of  reconstruction." 

Pike,  James  S.     The  prostrate  state:  South   Carolina   under    negro 

government. 
New  York:  D.  Appletoinkco.,1871^.     279  pp.     12°. 

[Presley,  Samuel  C.]     Negro  lynching  in  the  South.     Treating  of  the 
negro,  his    past   and    present   condition,   of    the  cause  of 
lynching,  and  of  the  means  to  remedy  the  evil. 
Washington,  D.    C. :     T.   W.    Cadick,  1899.      64  pp.     Illus 
trations.     8°. 

Prichard,  Hesketh.     Where  black  rules  white;  a  journey  across  and 

about  Hayti. 

Westminister:  Archibald  Constable  c§  Co.,  1000.  (10},  288 
pp.  Illustrations.  Plates.  8°. 

Richings.  G.  E.     An  album  of  negro  educators. 

[n.  p.,  1900.]     48pp.     Illustrations.      Oil.  32°. 

Riley,  Jerome  R.     The  philosophy  of  negro  suffrage. 

Hartford:  American  publishing  company,  189').  110  pp. 
Portrait.  8°. 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGKO    QUESTION.  13 

/Royall,  William  L.     History  of  the  Virginia  debt  controversy.     The 

negro's  vicious  influence  in  politics. 
RicJunond.Va.:  Geo.  M.  West,  publisher,  1897.    lllpp.    12°. 

Sadler,  M.  E.     The  education  of  the  coloured  race. 

( Li  Great  Britain.  Board  of  education.  Special  reports  on  educa 
tional  subjects,  vol.  11.  Education  in  the  United  States  of  Amer 
ica,  part  2,  pp.  521-560.  London,  1902.  8°.) 

Slater  (John  F.)  fund  for  the  education  of  freednien.     Proceedings 

of  the  trustees. 
Balt'wior,':  J.  Murphy  db  co.,  1892-1901.     6  w>U.     8°. 

The  "Occasional  papers"  of  the  Slater  fund,  nos.  1-6,  are  reprinted 
in  the  United  States.  Commissioner  of  education.  Report, 
1894-95,  vol.  2,  pp.  1366-1424. 

Social  und  physical  condition  of  negroes  in  cities.  Report  of  an  inves 
tigation  under  the  direction  of  Atlanta  university:  and 
Proceedings  of  the  second  conference  for  the  study  of 
problems  concerning  negro  city  life,  held  at  Atlanta  uni 
versity,  May  25-26,  1897. 

Atlanta,  Cra.;  Atlanta  university  press,  1897 .     7l2,lJipp.    8°. 
(Atlanta,  university.     Publications,  no.  2.) 

,  Southern  society  for  the  promotion  of  the  study  of  race  conditions 
and  problems  in  the  South.  Race  problems  of  the  South. 
Report  of  the  proceedings  of  the  first  annual  conference 
...  at  Montgomery,  Alabama,  May  8,  9,  10,  1900. 
Rich)iion<l:  B.  F.  Johnson  publishing  company.  [1900],  240 
pp.  5°. 

(.'ontoits:  "Montgomery's  welcome  to  the  visitors  and  delegates," 
E.  B.  Joseph;  "The  welcome  of  Alabama,"  Joseph  F.  Johnston; 
''The  idea  and  history  of  the  conference,"  J.  B.  Gaston;  "The 
problems  that  present  themselves,"  Hilary  A.  Herbert;  "The 
franchise  in  the  South,"  Alfred  Moore  Waddell;  John  T.  Graves; 
William  A.  McCockle;  "  Popular  education  in  the  South,"  Hollis 

B.  Frissell;  Julius  D.  Dreher;  J.  L.  M.  Curry;  "The  negro  in  rela 
tion  to   religion;"    "Expenditures   for    negro    evangelization — 
Principles  and  methods;"   "Which  is  the  wiser  form  of  religious 
work  among  negroes — that  controlled  by  white  agencies,  or  that 
administered  by  negroes?"  D.  Clay  Lilly,  W.  A.  Guerry;  "What 
are  the  religious  conditions  of  the  negro  to-day,  compared  with 
those  of  ante-bellum  days — the  differences  and  their  significance? ' ' 

C.  C.  Brown;  "Should  we  advise  the  raising  of  the  standard  of 
ordination  for  the  negro  clergy?"  J.  R.  Slattery;  Lynching  as  a 
penalty:    "The  punishment  of  crimes  against  women — existing 
legal  remedies  and  their  sufficiency,"  Alex.  C.  King;  "Is  lynch 
ing  advisable?"  Clifton  C.  Breckinridge;  The  negro  and  the  social 
order:  "The  sacrifice  of  a  race,"  Paul  B.  Barringer;  "The  negro 
as  an  American  problem,"  W.  Bourke  Cockran;  "A  partial  list 
of  books  and  pamphlets  on  the  negro  question  in   the  United 
States,"  S.  M.  Lindsay,  pp.  224-240. 


14  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

Spahr  Charles  B.     America's  working  people. 

Longmans,  Green  and  co.,  New  York,  London  \_etc. ~\,  1900.  vi, 
(2),  261pp.  12°. 

The  negro  as  an  industrial  factor,  pp.  72-90. 
The  negro  as  a  citizen,  pp.  91-119. 

[Stetson,  George  R.]    The  southern  negro  as  he  is.    By  G.  R.  S. 
Boston:   G.  H.  Ellis,  1877.     32 pp.     8°. 

Stone,  Alfred  Holt.     The  negro  in  the  Yazoo-Mississippi  delta. 

(In  American  economic  association.     Publications,  3d  series,  vol  3, 
pp.  235-272.     New  York,  1902.     8°. ) 

Sutton,  Edwin  H.     Negro  problem. 

[Baltimore,  1889.}     71pp.     12°. 

Thorn,  William  Taylor.  The  negroes  of  Litwalton,  Virginia:  a  social 
study  of  the  %i  Oyster  negro." 

(In  United  States.     Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin,  no.  37,   pp. 
1115-1170.     Washington,  1901.     8°.) 

The  negroes  of  Sandy  Spring,  Maryland:  a  social  study. 

(In  United  States.     Department  of  Labor.     Bulletin,  no.  32,  pp. 
43-102.     Washington,  1901.     8". ) 

Thomas,  William  Hannibal.  The  American  negro,  what  he  was,  what 
he  is,  and  what  he  may  become.  A  critical  and  practical 
discussion. 

New  York:  The  Macmillan  company,  1901.  ,r,v»i,  (#),  440 
pp.  8°. 

Thrasher,  Max  Bennett.     Tuskegee:  its  story  and  its  work.     With  an 

introduction  by  Booker  T.  Washington. 

Boston:  Small,  Maynard  c6  company,  WOO.  ,cvi,  216  pp. 
Plates.  Portrait.  12°. 

Tillinghast,  Joseph  Alexander.     The  negro  in  Africa  and  America. 

Published  for  the  American  economic  association  by  the  Mac 
millan  company,  Ne-w  York.  [1902].  vi,  231  pp.  8°. 
(American  economic  association.  Publications,  third  series, 
vol.  3,  no.  2.  May,  1902.} 

Part  I:  The  negro  in  West  Africa. 
Part  II:  The  negro  under  American  slavery. 
Part  III:  The  negro  as  a  free  citizen. 
Bibliography,  pp.  229-231. 

Tourgee,  Albion  W.     An  appeal  to  Caesar. 

New  York:  Fords,  Howard  and  IMbert,  188^.     4,22pp.  16°. 


UN  iv  errs  IT 


LIST    OF    BOOKS    ON    THE    NEGRO    QUESTION.  15 

United  States.  55th  Congress,  °2d  session.  /Senate  document  no.  114. 
Protest  of  citizens  of  Louisiana,  etc.  Letter  from  the 
attorney  -general,  transmitting,  in  response  to  resolution  of 
the  Senate  of  January  26,  1898,  copy  of  a  protest  of  citizens 
of  Louisiana  against  violations  of  the  Constitution  by  the 
acting  circuit  judge  and  the  district  attorney  of  the  United 
States  for  the  eastern  district  of  Louisiana  by  the  exclusion 
from  service  on  juries  in  the  United  States  courts  of  duly 
qualified  citizens  on  account  of  color.  Feb.  4,  1898.  14 
pp.  8°. 

Senate  document  no.  11^  j_>t.  2.  Exclusion  of  colored 
persons  from  juries  in  United  States  courts  in  Louisiana. 
Letter  from  the  attorney-general,  transmitting,  in  further 
response  to  resolution  of  the  Senate  of  Jan.  26,  1898,  copies 
of  answers  filed  by  the  district  judge  and  the  attorney  of 
the  United  States,  referred  to  in  the  protest  concerning 
alleged  exclusion  of  colored  persons  from  service  upon 
juries  in  the  United  States  court  in  the  district  of  Louisiana. 
Mar.  7,  1898.  5  pp.  8°. 

Bureau  of  Education.     Education  of  the  colored  race. 

(In   Report  of  commissioner  for   1894-95,  vol.  2,  pp.   1331-1366. 
Washington,  1896.     8°.) 

The  Slater  fund  and  the  education  of  the  negro. 

(In   Report   of   commissioner   for   1894-95,  vol.  2,  pp.    1367-1424. 
Washington,  1896.     8°.) 

Education  of  the  colored  race. 

(In  Report   of   commissioner   for   1895-96,  vol.  2,  pp.    2081-2115. 
Washington,  1897.     8°.) 

Education  of  the  colored  race. 

(In   Report   of   commissioner   for   1896-97,  vol.  2,   pp.   2295-2333. 
Washington,  1898.     8°.) 

Education  of  the  colored  iacp. 

(In   Report  of   commissioner   for  1897-98,  vol.   2,   pp.   2479-2507. 
Washington,  1899.     8°.) 

-  The  future  of  the  colored  race. 

(In  Report  of  the  commissioner  for  1898-99,  vol.  1,  pp.  1227-1248. 
Washington,  1900.     8°.) 

-  Department  of  Labor.     Condition  of  the  negro  in  various  cities. 
(In  Us  Bulletin,  vol.  2,  May  1897,  pp.  257-369.    Washington,  1897. 


16  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

"Washington,  Booker  T.     Education  of  the  negro. 

( In  Butler,  Nicholas  Murray,  ed.  Education  in  the  United  States, 
[vol.  2],  pp.  893-936.  Albany,  N.  Y.  1900.  8°.  United  States 
commission  to  the  Paris  exposition  of  1900.  Department  of 
education.  Monograph  18. ) 

-  The  future  of  the  American  negro. 

Boston:   Small,  Maynard  16  company,  1899.     (2),  ,r,  3,  294 
pp.     Portrait.     12°. 

An  autobiography;    the  story  of    my  life  and  work.      Intro 
duction  by  Dr.  J.  L.  M.  Curry. 

Toronto,    Ont.,  NapervlUe,    Dl.    \etc.~\:   J.    L.  Nichols  c5  co. 
[1901].      4J55  pp.      frontispiece.     Plates.     Portraits.     8°. 

-  Up  from  slavery.     An  autobiography. 

New     Yorl-:    Doubleday,    Page   &   co.,   1901.     iw,   330  pp. 
Portrait.     8^. 

-  De  esclavo  a  catedratico;  autobiografia  de  Booker  T.  Washing 

ton;  vertida  del   ingles   al   espanol   por   Alfredo   Elfas  y 
Pujol.  ^ 

Nueva   York:  J).  Appleton  y  compania,  1902.     vii,  (1),  297 
pp.     Frontispiece.     Plates.     Portraits.     12°. 

West,   Max.     The   fourteenth   amendment   in    the    light   of   recent 
decisions. 

(In  Yale  review,  vol.  8,  Feb.  1900,  pp.  385-402.) 

•  Williams,  Fannie  Barrier.  A  new  negro  for  a  new  century;  an 
accurate  and  up-to-date  record  of  the  upward  struggles  of 
the  negro  race. 

Chicago:      American    publishing     house,    [1900. \      ^28  pp. 
Portraits.     8C. 

1   Willcox,  Walter  F.     Negro  criminality. 

(In  American  social  science  association.  Journal,  no.  37,  pp.  78-98, 
1899. ) 


NEGRO  QUESTION:    ARTICLES   IN    PERIODICALS. 

1879.     Reconstruction  and  the  negro.     D.  H.  Chamberlain. 

North  American  review,  vol.  128  (Feb.  1879):  161-173. 

1879.  Ought  the  negro  to  be  disfranchised?  Ought  he  to  have  been 
enfranchised?  James  G.  Blaine,  L.  Q.  C.  Lamar,  Wade 
Hampton,  James  A.  Garfield,  Alexander  H.  Stephens, 
Wendell  Phillips,  Montgomery  Blair,  Thomas  A.  Hen- 
dricks. 
North  American  review,  vol.  128  (Mar.  1879):  225-283. 

1884.  The  future  of  the  negro  in  the  South.     James  B.  Craighead. 

Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  26  (Nov.  1884)  •'  39. 

1885.  The  freedman's  case  in  equity.     George  W.  Cable. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  29  (Jan.  1885}:  409-4-18. 

1885.     In  plain  black  and  white.     A  reply  to  Mr.  Cable.     Henry  W. 
Grady. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  29  (Apr.  1885):  909-917. 

1889.  The  republican  party  and  the  negro.     E.  L.  Godkin, 

forum,  vol.  7  (May,  1889):  246-257. 

1890.  Statistics  of  the  colored  race  in  the  United  States.     Francis  A. 

Walker. 

American  statistical  association.     Publications,  vol.  2  (Sept.— 
Dec.,  1890):  91-106. 

1891.  White  and  negro  criminals. 

The  Tradesman  (Chattanooga),  vol.  25  (May  1,  1891):  4-8. 

1891.     Negro  labor.     The  experience  of  Southern  manufacturers. 

The  Tradesman  (Chattanooga],  vol.  25  (Aug.  15,  1891):  31-32, 
35. 

1891.     Negro  labor  in  the  South.     Comments  of  leading  journals. 
The  Tradesman  (Chattanooga'),  vol.  26  (Oct.  15,  1891):  55. 

1891.  Thoughts  on  the  negro  problem.     James  Bryce. 

Worth  American  review,  vol.  153  (Dec.,  1891):  641- 

1892.  A  cross  section  through  North  Carolina.     A.  B.  Hart. 

Nation,  vol.  54  (Mar.  17,  1892):  207. 

1892.     A  Southerner  on  the  negro  question.     Thomas  Nelson  Page. 

North  American  review,  vol.  154  (Apr.,  1892):  401. 
21884—03 2  17 


18  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

1893.     Negro    suffrage   a    failure:    shall    we    abolish   it?     John    C. 
Wickliffe. 

Forum,  vol.  14  (Feb.,  1893}:  797-80Jh 

1893.  Why  the  Southern  elections  fraud  issue  was  a  failure.     L. 

Satterthwait. 
American  journal  of  politics,  vol.  2  (Apr.,  1893}:  412. 

1894.  The  South  and  its  problems.     L.  B.  Evans. 

Educational  review,  vol.  7  (Apr.,  1894):  333-342. 

1896.     South  Carolina's  new  constitution.     Albert  Shaw. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.   13  (Jan.,  1896}: 
66-71. 

1896.     The  education  of  the  negro.     J.  L.  M.  Curry. 

American  magazine  of  civics,  vol.  8  (Feb.,  1896}:  169-180. 

•    1898.     The  study  of  the  negro  problems.     W.  E.  Burghardt  DuBois. 

American  academy  of  political   and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  11,  (Jan.,  1898}:  1-23. 

1898.     Taking  away  the  negro's  ballot.     Francis  Bellamy. 

Illustrated  American,  vol.  23  (Jan.  15,  1898}:  72. 

1898.     An  appeal  to  the  Louisiana  convention. 

Independent,  vol.  50  (FJ>.  17,  1898}:  217-218. 

1898.    The  Louisiana  suffrage  clause.     Would  it  be  constitutional? 

Public  opinion,vol.  2. '+ (March 2 4, 1898):  362;  (June  2,  1898): 
679. 

1898.     The  Louisiana  constitution. 

Independent,  vol.  50  (March  31,  1898}:  412-413. 

1898.     The  new  constitution  (Louisiana). 

Nation,  vol.  66  (May  19,  1898):  37 4. 

1898.     Disfranchising  a  race. 

Nation,  vol.  66  (May  26,  1898}:  398-399. 

1898.     The  future  of  the  American  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

M/ssionari/  review,  vol.  21  (June,  1898):  487-433. 

1898.     Education  and  suffrage  of  negroes.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
Education,  vol.  19  (Sept.  1898):  49-50. 

»  1898.     The  race  problem  in  the  South.    I.  The  North  Carolina  revo 
lution  justified.     A.  J.  McKehvay.     II.  A  negro's   view. 
Kelly  Miller. 

Outlook,  vol.  GO  (Dec,  31,  1898):  1057-1059;  1059-1063. 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS.  19 

1899.     A   negro  schoolmaster  in  the  new  South.     W.  E.  Burghardt 
DuBois. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  83  (Jan.,  1899}:  99-104. 

1899.     Race  war  in  North  Carolina.     H.  L.  West. 

Forum,  vol.  26  (Jon.  1899}:  578-579. 

1899.     Light  in  the  South.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (Jan.  19,  1899):  175-176. 

1899.     Efforts  of  negroes  for  their  own  social  betterment. 

Outlook,  vol.  61  (Jan.  28,  1899}:  235. 

1899.     [Discrimination  between  whites  and  negroes  in  the  South.] 
Independent,  vol.  51  (Mar.  9,  1899}:  713. 

1899.     The  three  phases  of  colored  suffrage.     Walter  C.  Hamm. 

North  American  review,  vol.  168  (Mar.  1899}:  285-296. 

-1899.     Negro  disfranchisement. 

Outlook,  vol.  61  (Mar.  4,  1899}:  486. 

1899.  The  race  problem.  A  symposium.  1.  The  origin  of  race  an 
tagonism,  by  James  T.  Holly.  2.  Is  there  a  negro  problem  ? 
by  W.  H.  Councill.  3.  Disfranchisement  as  a  remedy,  by  J. 
Montgomery  McGovern.  -i.  Impossibility  of  racial  amal 
gamation,  by  W.  S.  McCurley.  5.  Educational  possibili 
ties,  by  Booker  T.  Washington. 
Arena,  vol.  21  (Apr.  1899}:  421-4,58. 

1899.     Negro  disfranchisement  in  North  Carolina. 
Outlook,  vol.  61  (Apr.  1,  1899}:  711-712. 

1899.     Negro  disfranchisement  in  Alabama. 

Outlook,  vol.  61  (Apr.  8,  1899}:  802-803. 

1899.     A  Southern  woman's  view  [of  the  negro  question.]    Mrs.  L.  H. 

Harris. 
Independent,  vol.  51  (May  18,  1899}:  1354-1355. 

1899.     The  negro  and  crime.     W.  E.  Burghardt  DuBois. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (May  18,  1899}:  1355-1357. 

1899.     America's  working  people.      4.  The  negro  as  an  industrial 
factor.     5.  The  negro  as  a  citizen.     Charles  B.  Spahr. 

Outlook,  vol.  62  (May  6, 1899}:  31-37;  (July  1, 1899}:  490-439. 

1899.     Negro  suffrage  in  Alabama.     Joseph  F.  Johnston. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (June  8,  1899}:  1535-1537. 

1899.     Negro  womanhood.     Mrs.  L.  H.  Harris. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (June  22,  1899}:  1687-1689. 


20  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

1899.     "Good  Indians"  and  "good  'niggers.'"    T.  Thomas  Fortune. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (June  22,  1899):  1689. 

1899.     Negro  immorality. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (June  22,  1899):  1703-1704- 

1899.     History  of  the  negro  question.     J.  L.  M.  Curry. 

Popular  science  monthly ',  vol.  55' (June  1899):  177-185. 

1899.     The  future  of  the  negro.     W.  H.  Council!. 

Forum,  vol.  27  (July  1899):  570-577. 

t    1899.     Race  problem  in  the  United  States.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
Popular  science  monthly ',  vol.  55  (July  1899) :  3 17-325. 

1899.     The  negro  as  a  modern  soldier.     James  Cleland  Hamilton. 
Anglo-American  magazine,  vol.  2  (Aug.  1899):  1 13-1% '4. 

1899.     The  racial  troubles  in  the  South.     B.  Odell  Duncan. 
Harpers  weekly,  vol.  43  (Aug.  19.  1899):  817. 

•  1899.     A  pioneer  in  negro  education.     Bernard  C.  Steiner. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (Aug.  24,  1899):  2287-2290. 

1899.     The  negro  as  a  soldier. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  27  (Aug.  17.  1899}:  198. 

»    1899.     The  American  negro  and  his  place.     Elizabeth  L.  Banks. 

Nineteenth  century,  vol.  46  (Sept.  1899):  459-4H- 

*    1899.     The  case  of  the  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 
Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  84  (Nov.  1899}:  577-587. 

.f  1899.     The  suffrage  tight  in  Georgia.     W.  H.  Burghardt  l)u  Bois. 
Independent,  vol.  51  (Nov.  30,  1899):  3226-3228. 

1899.     Disfranchising  the  negro. 

Nation,  vol.  69  (Nov.  23.  1899):  384. 

1899.     A  negro  on  the  position  of  the  negro  in  America.    D.  E.  Tobias. 
Nineteenth  century,  vol.  46  (Dec.  1899):  957-973. 

1899.  Disfranchisement  defeated  in  Georgia. 

Independent,  vol.  51  (Dec.  7,  1899):  3306-3307. 

1900.  The  Philadelphia  negro:  a  social  study.     Percy  N.  Booth. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  15  (Jan.  1900):  100-103. 

1900.     Race  war  and  negro  demoralization.     Thomas  F.  Price. 

American    Catholic   quarter?)/   review,  vol.   25   (Jan.    1900): 
89-105. 


NEGEO  QUESTION:  AETICLES  IN  PERIODICALS.  21 

1900.     Negro  education.     Charles  Minor  Blackford,  jr. 

Arena,  vol.  23  (Jan.  1900}:  24-30 

1900.     Signs  of  progress  among  the  negroes.     Booker  T.  Washing- 
9  ton. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  59  (Jan.  1900}:  Ji72-478. 

1900.     The   negro   as   a   factor   in   the  future  of  the  West  Indies. 
H.  C.  De  Lisser. 

New  century  review,  vol.  7  (Jan.  1900}:  1-6. 

>       1900.     Booker  T.  Washington  on  our  racial  problem. 
Outlook,  vol.  64  (Jan.  6,  1900}:  14-17. 

1900.     The  Philadelphia  negro.     Henry  L.  Philipps. 

Charities  review,  vol.  9  (Feb.  1900}:  575-578. 

1900.     The  American  negro  of  to-day.     Philip  Alexander  Bruce. 

Contemporary  review,  vol.  77  (Feb.  1900):  284-297. 

»        1900.     Secret  societies  and  negro  progress.     W.  P.  Trent. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  28  (Feb.  22,  1900}:  238. 

1900.     The  race  problem:  a  southern  conference. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  15  (March,  1900}:  307-310. 

1900.     The  negro  as  a  political  factor  in  the  South.     A.  K.  Abbott. 
Anglo-American  magazine,  vol.  3  (March,  1900} :  203-207. 

1900.     Thirty -five  years  of  freedom  for  the  negro. 
Outlook,  vol.  64  (Mar.  10,  1900}:  565. 

1900.     Village  improvement  among  the  negroes.     R.  L.  Smith. 
Outlook,  vol.  64  (Mar.  31,  1900}:  733-736. 

»   1900.     The  negro  in  business. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  28  (Mar.  1900}:  399. 

•  1900.     The  American  negro  in  business. 

Spectator,  vol.  84  (Mar.  31,  1900}:  440. 

1900.     "•  Learning  by  doing"  at  Hampton.     Albert  Shaw. 

American  review  of  reviews,  vol.  21  (Apr.  1900}:  417-1$%. 

t     1900.     The  negro's  case  in  equity.     Ida  B.  Wells  Barnett. 

Independent,  vol.  52  (Apr.  26,  1900}:  1010. 

1900.     Lynching  and  the  franchise  rights  of  the  negro. 

American,  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  15  (May,  1900):  493-497. 


22 
1900. 

.  1900. 

1900. 

• 

•  1900. 
1900. 

1900. 

• 

1900. 

1900. 

• 

•  1900. 

1900. 
.  1900. 
»  1900. 
,  1900. 

1900. 

1900. 

1900. 

j? 

1900. 
•   1900. 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

The  negro  and  the  soil.     D.  Allen  Willey. 
Arena,  vol.  23  (May,  1900):  553-560. 

The  Montgomery  conference.     Isabel  C.  Barrows. 
Independent,  vol.  52  (May  24,  1900):  1257-1259. 

The  Montgomery  conference. 

Outlook,  vol.  65  (May  19,  1900):  153-155. 

The  Montgomery  conference.     Isabel  C.  Barrows. 
Outlook,  vol.  65  (May  19,  1900):  160-162. 

The  negro  since  the  civil  war.     N.  S.  Shaler. 
Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  57  (May,  1900):  29-39. 

The  Montgomery  conference. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  21  (June,  1900):  655. 

Will  education  solve  the  race  problem?     John  Roach  Straton. 
?forth  American  revien\  vol.  170  (June*  1900):  785-801. 

The  future  of  the  negro  in  the  Southern  states.     N.  8.  Shaler. 
Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  57  (June,  1900):  147-156. 

The  industrial  color-line  in  the  North.     James  S.  Stemons. 
Century  magazine,  vol.  60  (July,  1900):  JfiJ-JfiS. 

The  Montgomery  conference. 

Charltie*  review,  vol.  10  (July,  1900):  193-194. 

Montgomery  conference. 

Chautauyuan ,  vol.  31  (July,  1900):  328. 

The  Montgomery  race  conference.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Century  magazine*  vol.  60  (Aug.  1900):  630-632. 

Tuskegee  negro  conference.     Max  Bennett  Thrasher. 

Chautauquan,  vol.  31  (Aug.  1900):  504-507. 

The  negro  problem  in  the  South.     Charles  Henry  Grosvenor. 

Forum,  vol.  29  (Aug.  1900):  720-725. 

North  Carolina's  red-shirt  campaign. 
Independent,  vol.  52  (Aug.  2,  1900):  1874-1876. 

Election  in  North  Carolina.      Marion  Butler. 
Independent,  vol.  52  (Aug.  16,  1900):   1953-1955. 

The  North  Carolina  suffrage  amendment.     A.  J.  McKelway. 

Independent,  vol.  52  (Aug.  16,  1900}:  1955-1957. 

Education  will  solve  the  race  problem.     A  reply.      Booker  T. 

Washington. 
N&rth  American  reviev\  rot.  171  (Any.  1900):  221-832. 


NEGKO  QUESTION:  AETICLES  IN  PEEIODICALS.  23 

1900.     Crime  among  the  negroes  of  Chicago.     A  social  study.     Mon 
roe  N.  W'ork. 
American  journal  of  sociology,  vol.  6  (Sept.  1900):  204~% 


1900.     The  fourteenth  amendment  and  the  race  question.     Max  West. 
American  journal  of  sociology,  vol.  6  (Sept.  1900):  248-254- 

1900.     North  Carolina's  suffrage  amendment. 

American,   monthly  review   of  reviews,  vol.  22  (Sept.  1900): 

273-274. 

1900.     Crime  among  the  negroes  of  Chicago. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  29  (Sept.  20,  1900):  367. 

•  1900.     The  negro  problem  in  the  South.     Oscar  W.  Underwood. 

Fvrum,  vol.  30  (Oct.  1900):  215-219. 

1900.  Have  we  an  American  race  question?  1.  The  negro  vindi 
cated.  George  Allen  Mebane.  2.  Passing  of  the  race 
problem.  Walter  L.  Hawley.  3.  Lawlessness  vs.  law 
lessness.  W.  S.  Scarborough,  -i.  A  plea  from  the  South. 
Walter  Guild. 
Arena,  vol.  &£  (Nov.,  1900):  J49-488. 

i   1900.     Paths  of  hope  for  the  negro.     Jerome  Dowd. 

Century  magazine,  vol.  61  (Dec.  1900):  278-281. 

1900.     The  negro  in  New  York.     Jno.  Gilmer  Speed. 

Harper^  weekly,  vol.  U  (Dec.  22,  1900):  1249-1250. 

•  1900.     The  American   negro  and   his   economic  value.     Booker   T. 

Washington. 
International  monthly*  vol.  2  (Dec.  1900):  672-680. 

1900.  The   religion   of    the   American   negro.      W.    E.    Burghardt 

DuBois. 
New  world,  vol.  9  (Dec.  1900):  614-625. 

1901.  The  criminal  negro.     1.  A  sociological  study.     2.  Southern 

conditions  that  influence  negro  criminality.  3.  Some  of 
his  characteristics.  4.  Advantages  and  abuses  of  Southern 
systems.  5.  Physical  measurements  of  females.  Frances 
A.  Kellor. 

Arena,  vol.  25  (Jan.  1901):  59-68;  (Fell.  1901):  190-197; 
(Mar.  1901):  308-316;  (Apr.  1901):  419-1&8;  (May,  1901): 
510-520. 

1901.     Reconstruction  of  the  Southern  states.     W.  Wilson. 
Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  87  (Jan.,  1901):  1-15. 


24  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

1901.     Has  Jamaica  solved  the  color  problem?     Julius  Moritzen. 

Guntorfs  magazine,  vol.  20  (Jan.,  1901}:  31-4.6. 

1901.     New  Orleans  and  negro  education. 

Guntons  magazine*  vol.  20  (Jan.,  1901}:  66-70. 

1901.     The.  conditions  of   the  reconstruction  problem.     Hilary  A. 
Herbert. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  87  (Feb.,  1901}:  145-157. 

1901.     The  training  of  the  negro  teacher.     Nathan  B.  Young. 
Education,  vol  L21  (Feb.,  1901}:  309-364. 

1901.     The  negro  and  education.     Kelly  Miller. 
Forum,  vol.  30  (Feb.,  1901}:  693-700. 

1901.     A   Southern    woman's   appeal    for  justice.     Amanda    Smith 
Jemand. 

Independent,  vol.  53  (Feb.  21,  1901):  438-440. 

•  1901.     The  negro  problem.     Charles  H.  Vail. 

International  socialist  review,  vol.  1  (Feb.,  1901}:  4.64--470. 

1901.     The  South  and  the  negro.     Marion  L.  Dawson. 

North  American  review,  vol.  172  (Feb.,  1901}:  279-284. 

1901.     Disfranchisement  in  Maryland. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  30  (Feb.,  21,  1901}:  230-231. 

4  1901.     The  race  problem.     As  discussed  by  negro  women.     Mary 
Taylor  Blauvelt. 

American  journal  of  sociology,  vol.  6  (Mar.,  1901}:  662-672. 

1901.     Negro  education  in  the  South.     Paul  B.  Barringer. 

Educational  review,  vol.  21  (Mar.,  1901}:  233-243. 

9  1901.     The  negro  in  business.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

G  union's  magazine,  vol.  20  (Mar.,  1901}:  209-219. 

1901.     The  remedy  for  disfranchisement. 

Public  opinion,  vol.  30  (Mar.  28,  1901}:  390-391. 

1901.     Reconstruction  in  South  Carolina.     Daniel  H.  Chamberlain. 
Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  87  (Apr.  1901}:  473-J+84. 

1901.     The  case  for  the  South      J.  W.  Bailey. 

Forum,  vol.  31  (Apr.  1901}:  225-230. 

*  1901.     The  Tuskegee  negro  conference  as  an  educational  force.    Max 

Bennett  Thrasher. 
Guntorfs  magazine,  vol.  20  (Apr.  1901}:  359-366. 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  ARTICLES  IN  PERIODICALS. 


25 


1901.     The  Southern  mountaineer.     John  Fox,  jr. 

Scr  liners  magazine,  vol.  29  (Apr.    1901}:   387-399;  (May, 
1901}:  556-570. 

1901.     The  negro  and  our  new  possessions.     W.  S.  Scarborough. 
Forum,  vol.  31  (May,  1901}:  340-3J+9. 

1901.     Popular  education  and  the  race  problem  in  North  Carolina. 
Joseph  W.  Bailey. 

Outlook,  vol.  68  (May  11,  1901}:  114-116. 

JL901.     The  Alabama  constitutional  convention.     Max  B.  Thrasher. 

Outlook,  vol.  68  (June  22, 1901}:  437-439. 

1901.     Shame  of  New  Orleans. 

Independent,  vol.  53  (July  11,  1901}:  1630. 

1901.     The  burden  of  negro  schooling.     W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois. 

*  Independent,  vol.  53  (July  18, 1901}:  1667-1668. 

1901.     The  condition  of  the  South.     Walter  G.  Oakman. 

North  American  review,  vol.  173  (July,  1901} :  40-43. 

1901.     The  negro  as  soldier  and  officer. 

Nation,  vol.  7 3  (Aug.  1,1901}:  85-86. 

1901.     Southern  suffrage  amendments.     Joseph  Culbertson  Clayton. 

Albany  law  journal,  vol.  63  (Sept.,  1901}:  358-359. 

1901.     The  southern  people  during  reconstruction.     T.  N.  Page. 
Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  88  (Sept.,  1901}:  289-304. 

1901.     Southern  problem.     G.  A.  Thacher. 

Forum,  vol.  32  (Sept.  1901}:  116-118. 

^^1901.     Reconstruction  and  disfranchisement. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  88  (Oct.  1901}:  ^33-437. 

1901.     The  undoing  of  reconstruction.     William  A.  Dunning. 

Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  88  (Oct.  1901}:  4,37-4/^9. 

1901.     Alabama's  new  constitution. 

Outlook,  vol.  69  (Nov.  23,  1901}:  751. 

1901.     The  race  problem  at  the  South.     H.  A.  Herbert. 

Social  scltnce,  vol.  4  (Nov.  1901} :  139-140. 

1901.  Suffrage,  North  and  South.     William  R.  Merriam 

Forum,  vol.  32  (Dec.  1901}:  460-465. 

1902.  Alabama  constitutional  convention.     G.  Corey. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
vol.  19  (Jan.  1902}:  143-145. 


26  LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 

t 

^  1902.     The  American  negro  as  a  religious,  social,  and  political  factor. 

Kelly  Miller. 
Anglo-American  magazine,  vol.  7  (Jan.  1903):  63-75. 

1902.     Alabama's  new  constitution. 

Chautauquan,  vol.  34  (Jan.  1902}:  361. 

«      1902.     Economic  work  of  the  negro.     B.  T.  Washington. 

Current  literature,  vol.  32  (Jan.  1902):  8-5-86. 

/1902.     Our  negro  population. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Jan.  2,  1902):  57. 

,  1902.     Impossibility  of  restoring  negro  suffrage. 

World's  work,  vol.  3  (Jan.  1902):  1585-1586. 

1902.     The  expansion  of  the  negro  population.     Kelly  Miller. 

Forum,  vol.  32  (Fel>.  1902):  671-679. 

t   1902.     The '"Black  north."     Rebecca  Harding  Davis. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Pel.  6,  1902):  338-340. 

1902.     The  negro  problem.     Henry  W.  Blair. 

Independent,  vol  54  (Feb.  20,  1902):  J42-444. 

1902.     Theology  versus  thrift  in  the  black  belt,     Charles  B.  Dyke. 

Popular  science  monthly,  vol.  60  (Fel.  1902):  360-361,. 

0  1902.     The  American  negro's  religion  for  the  African  negro's  soul. 
Levi  J.  Coppin. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Mar.  27,  1902):  7^8-750. 

1902.     The  new  race  question  in  the  South.     S.  A.  Hamilton. 
Arena,  vol.  27  (Apr.  1902):  352-358. 

1902.     The  settlement  idea  in  the  cotton  belt.     Pitt  Dillingham. 

Outlook,  vol.  70  (Apr.  12,  1902):  920-922. 

•    1902.     The  negro  and  higher  learning.     W.  S.  Scarborough. 

Forum,  vol.  33  (May,  1902):  349-355. 

/  1902.     Negro  disfranchisement  in  Louisiana.     Paul  L.  Haworth. 

Outlook,  vol.  71  (May  17,  1902):  162-166. 

1902.     Suffrage  in  the  South:  six  new  state  constitutions.     Chappell 
Cory. 

Anteric<in    monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.  25  (June,  1902): 
716-718. 

1902.     Shall  the  Southern  delegation  to  Congress  be  cut  down "'.   Edgar 
D.  Crumpacker. 

Frank  Leslies  popular  monthly,  vol.  54  (July,  1902):  281-286. 


NEGRO  QUESTION:  AETICLES  IN  PERIODICALS.  27 

1902.     Negrophilism  in  South  Africa.     M.  J.  Farrelly. 

Fortnightly  review,  vol.  78  (Aug.,  1902):  301-308. 

1902.     Of  the  training  of  black  men.     W.  E.  Burghardt  Du  Bois. 

*  Atlantic  monthly,  vol.  90  (Sept.,  1902):  289-297. 

1902.     The  American  negro.     Cuyler  Smith. 

Frank  Leslies  popular  monthly,  vol.  54  (Sept.  1902):  4.17- 
430. 

1902.     Colored  men  as  cotton  manufacturers.     Jerome  Dowd. 
Ghmton?*  magazine,  vol.  23  (Sept.  1902):  254-256. 

•      1902.     The  negro  problem — how  it  appeals  to  a  Southern    colored 
woman. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Sept.  18,  1902):  2221-2224. 

1902.     The   negro   problem — how    it   appeals  to  a  Southern    white 

woman. 
Independent,  vol.  54  (Sept.  18,  1902):  2224-2228. 

»  1902.     Negro  conditions  sensibly  discussed.     A.  R.  Holcombe. 

Outlook,  vol.  72  (Sept,  20,  1902):  170-173. 

1902.     The  crux  of  the  negro  question.     Henry  A.  Stimson. 

BlWwtheca  sacra,  vol.  59  (Oct.  1902):  717-729. 

1902.     Insanity  and  the  negro.     M.  L.  Perry. 

Current  literature,  vol.  33  (Oct.  1902):  467-468. 

1902.     A  plea  against  suffrage  restriction  in  the  South.    H.  D.  Money. 
Frank  Leslie Js popular  monthly,  vol.  54 (Oct.  1902):  609-613. 

•  1902.     The  negro  as  an  industrial  risk. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Oct.  2,  1902):  2381. 

X1902.     Suffrage  restriction  in  the  South:  its  causes  ana  consequences. 
Clarence  H.  Foe. 

North  American  review,  vol.  175  (Oct.  1902):  534-563. 

1902.     The  hope  of  the  negro.     J.  L.  Robinson. 

Open  court,  vol.  16  (Oct.  1902): 

>'  1902.     The  southern  republican  elimination  of  the  negro. 
World1*  work,  vol.  4  (Oct.  1902):  2591. 

1902.     The  negro  in  South  Africa  and  in  our  southern  states. 
World* *  work,  vol.  4  (Oct.  1902):  2591-2592. 

%      1902.     The  national  negro  business  league.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

TrV/>A/'.s-  y/v,?v5',  vol.  4  (Oct.  1902):  2671-2675. 


28 


LIBRARY    OF    CONGRESS. 


•  1902.     The  agricultural  negro.     Booker  T.  Washington. 

Arena,  vol.  28  (Nov.  1902):  461-463. 

1902.     The  native  labour  question  in  South  Africa.     H.  H.  Johnston. 
Nineteenth  century,  vol.  52  (Nov.  1902):  724-731. 

1902.     The  separate  street-car  law  in  New  Orleans.    A.  R.  Holcombe. 

Outlook,  vol.  72  (Nov.  29,  1902):  746-747. 

1902.     An  Alabama  negro  school.     Oswald  Garrison  Villa rd. 

American  monthly  review  of  reviews,  vol.    26   (Dec.   1902): 
711-714. 

1902.     The  Anglo-Saxon  and  the  African.     Kelly  Miller. 
'Arena,  vol.  28  (Dec.  1902):  575-584. 

1902.     Right  of  negroes  to  hold  office. 

Independent,  vol.  54  (Dec.  4,  1902):  2855-2856. 

1902.     Color  line.     P.  Goddard. 

Independent,  vol.  53  (Dec.  5,  1902):  2895-2897. 

1902.  The  President  on  the  appointment  of  negroes. 

Outlook,  vol.  72  (Dec.  6,  1902):  759-760. 

1903.  The  evolution  of  negro  labor.     Carl  Kelsey. 

American  academy  of  political  and  social  science.     Annals, 
><ol.  21  (Jan.,  1903):  55-76. 

19C3.     Deep  waters  of  the  race  problem. 

World's  work,  vol.  5  (Jan.,  1903):  2935. 

1903.     The  new  aspect  of  the  negro  question.    Thomas  Nelson  Page. 

Collier's  weekly,  vol.  30  (Feb.  28,  1903):  11. 

•  1903.     The  American  negro  historical  society  of  Philadelphia  and  its 

officers.     H.  Harrison  Way  man. 

Colored  American  magazine,  -vol.  6  (Feb.,  1903):  287-294. 

1903.     Latest  phases  of  the  race  problem  in  America.     Sarah  A. 

Allen. 
Colored  American  magazine,  vol.  6  (Feb.,  1903):  244-^5 1> 

1903.     The  negro  and  the  Philippines.     R.  B.  Lemus. 

Colored  American  magazine,  vol.  6  (Feb. ,  1903) :  314-318. 

«"*1903.     Hopeful  position  of  the  negro. 

American  monthly   review  of  reviews,  vol.  27  (Mar.,  1903): 
263-265. 


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